lenaitch
Senior Member
Not according to the CTSB who issued a report on exactly that with the last 2013 crash investigation.
Let me make this simple for those who are blind to see: Why should a bus not be required to meet "crash-worthiness" safety standards that a car must? Vehicles over 26,000 lbs are exempt in Canada. Try getting a 130 passengers in a car.
Over to you...
Some interpretations are that they are *required to*:
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/can...-to-improve-bus-safety-transportation-safety/
In the event, the CTSB certainly can participate, and have agreed to do so, they just don't have the *lead role* in it, which gives them even more power than a police investigation:
Canadian Transportation Accident Investigation and Safety Board Act
S.C. 1989, c. 3
Assented to 1989-06-29
Unlike a police investigation, the CTSB release detailed reports to the public and are governed federally. The Ottawa Police are Provincial. "Crashworthiness" is a federal competence.
2015 TSB Recommendations & TC Responses
R13T0192 – CROSSING COLLISION BETWEEN VIA RAIL CANADA INC. PASSENGER TRAIN NO. 51 AND OC TRANSPO DOUBLE-DECKER BUS NO. 8017, MILE 3.30, SMITHS FALLS SUBDIVISION, OTTAWA, ONTARIO – 18 SEPTEMBER 2013.
TSB Full-Text Report (R13T0192):
http://www.tsb.gc.ca/eng/rapports-reports/rail/2013/r13t0192/r13t0192.asp
I couldn't open the G&M link. While the TSB might have the freedom to comment on any transportation matter, the legislation empowering them limits their investigative authority to air, rail, marine and pipeline. The powers of an investigator would be limited by the Act and the Act doesn't empower them to investigate road accidents. They are providing technical assistance in this investigation. The agencies with investigative authority are the police and the coroner and even those investigations have to be firewalled from each other.
I'm certainly not arguing that large commercial and public-commercial vehicles should not have better safety standards, but that is a matter for the Department of Transport. The matter of seat belts on school buses is much more complicated.